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Large-scale pattern growth of graphene films for stretchable transparent electrodes

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TLDR
The direct synthesis of large-scale graphene films using chemical vapour deposition on thin nickel layers is reported, and two different methods of patterning the films and transferring them to arbitrary substrates are presented, implying that the quality of graphene grown by chemical vapours is as high as mechanically cleaved graphene.
Abstract
Problems associated with large-scale pattern growth of graphene constitute one of the main obstacles to using this material in device applications. Recently, macroscopic-scale graphene films were prepared by two-dimensional assembly of graphene sheets chemically derived from graphite crystals and graphene oxides. However, the sheet resistance of these films was found to be much larger than theoretically expected values. Here we report the direct synthesis of large-scale graphene films using chemical vapour deposition on thin nickel layers, and present two different methods of patterning the films and transferring them to arbitrary substrates. The transferred graphene films show very low sheet resistance of approximately 280 Omega per square, with approximately 80 per cent optical transparency. At low temperatures, the monolayers transferred to silicon dioxide substrates show electron mobility greater than 3,700 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) and exhibit the half-integer quantum Hall effect, implying that the quality of graphene grown by chemical vapour deposition is as high as mechanically cleaved graphene. Employing the outstanding mechanical properties of graphene, we also demonstrate the macroscopic use of these highly conducting and transparent electrodes in flexible, stretchable, foldable electronics.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sub-3 nm Co3O4 nanofilms with enhanced supercapacitor properties.

TL;DR: This large-scale preparation of sub-3 nm atomic layers Co3O4 nanofilms with a nonsurfactant and substrate-free hydrothermal method highlighted the reconstruction of cobalt-ammonia complexes and synergistic effect of free ammonia and nitrate on film growth control.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of graphene oxides

TL;DR: The band gap of the graphene oxide becomes narrower under uniaxial tensile strain, providing an efficient way to tune the electronic properties of graphene oxide-based materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flexible FET-type VEGF aptasensor based on nitrogen-doped graphene converted from conducting polymer.

TL;DR: The developed methodology describes, for the first time, the fabrication of N-doped graphene using conducting polymers including heteroatoms in their structures as the carbonization precursor and demonstrates its use in a high-performance, flexible FET-type aptasensor to detect vascular endothelial growth factor as a cancer biomarker.
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Highly Conductive All‐Plastic Electrodes Fabricated Using a Novel Chemically Controlled Transfer‐Printing Method

TL;DR: A novel transfer-printing method for high-performance all-plastic transparent electrodes is demonstrated, enabling expeditious "pick-and-place" transfer onto arbitrary surfaces using elastomeric stamps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrafast Relaxation Dynamics of Hot Optical Phonons in Graphene

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the relaxation dynamics of hot optical phonons in few-layer and multi-layer graphene films grown by epitaxy on silicon carbide substrates and by chemical vapor deposition on nickel substrates.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electric Field Effect in Atomically Thin Carbon Films

TL;DR: Monocrystalline graphitic films are found to be a two-dimensional semimetal with a tiny overlap between valence and conductance bands and they exhibit a strong ambipolar electric field effect.
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The rise of graphene

TL;DR: Owing to its unusual electronic spectrum, graphene has led to the emergence of a new paradigm of 'relativistic' condensed-matter physics, where quantum relativistic phenomena can now be mimicked and tested in table-top experiments.
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Two-dimensional gas of massless Dirac fermions in graphene

TL;DR: This study reports an experimental study of a condensed-matter system (graphene, a single atomic layer of carbon) in which electron transport is essentially governed by Dirac's (relativistic) equation and reveals a variety of unusual phenomena that are characteristic of two-dimensional Dirac fermions.
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Measurement of the Elastic Properties and Intrinsic Strength of Monolayer Graphene

TL;DR: Graphene is established as the strongest material ever measured, and atomically perfect nanoscale materials can be mechanically tested to deformations well beyond the linear regime.
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Raman spectrum of graphene and graphene layers.

TL;DR: This work shows that graphene's electronic structure is captured in its Raman spectrum that clearly evolves with the number of layers, and allows unambiguous, high-throughput, nondestructive identification of graphene layers, which is critically lacking in this emerging research area.
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